Status
Conditions
Treatments
Study type
Funder types
Identifiers
About
Intrauterine adhesions (IUA) remain highly prevalent in China, with incidence rates steadily increasing due to the rising number of intrauterine procedures. Literature reports indicate that IUA caused by repeated induced abortions, curettage, postpartum infections, and other intrauterine surgeries occurs in 25%-30% of cases, making it a leading cause of reduced menstrual flow, cyclic abdominal pain, recurrent miscarriage, and secondary infertility, significantly impairing women's reproductive health and overall well-being.
Currently, no effective treatment exists for severe IUA to fully restore fertility and normal menstrual physiology. The commonly used hysteroscopic adhesiolysis (TCRA) has a high recurrence rate of 62.5%, with a post-operative pregnancy success rate of only 22.5%-33.3%. Therefore, there is an urgent clinical need to explore novel therapeutic strategies for severe intrauterine adhesions.
Exosomes derived from induced pluripotent stem cells (iPS-Exo) offer significant advantages over MSC-derived exosomes due to their clonal origin, ensuring superior batch-to-batch consistency and stability. This feature enables more stringent quality control standards and facilitates standardized, scalable production and quality management systems. Compared to mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) or MSC-derived exosomes, iPS-Exo exhibit multiple superior properties:
Higher potency of bioactive components:
As iPSCs represent an earlier differentiation stage than MSCs, iPS-Exo contain elevated levels of functional factors such as TGF-β (anti-inflammatory), BDNF (neurotrophic), and others.
Demonstrated biological effects:
Enhanced pharmaceutical suitability:
Genetic engineering compatibility:
o Amenable to precision modification for targeted therapeutic enhancement.
Preclinical efficacy evidence:
Neuroprotection: Superior to MSC-Exo in mitigating neuronal damage induced by oxygen-glucose deprivation and hydrogen peroxide-induced oxidative stress.
Epilepsy models: Significant reduction in seizure frequency/severity and decreased cerebral IL-6/TNF-α levels in treated mice.
Stroke models: Intravenous administration:
Goodain (Beijing) Pharmaceutical Technology Co., Ltd., a biotechnology company specializing in induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) and exosome technologies, holds GMP laboratory certification. The company has independently developed clinical-grade iPSC-derived exosomes (iPS-Exo), which have been investigated in four investigator-initiated exploratory clinical trials across different indications, with no reported adverse events (AEs) or serious adverse events (SAEs) to date.
Preclinical Rationale
Our research team previously conducted preclinical studies using umbilical cord mesenchymal stem cell-derived exosomes (MSC-Exo) in a rat model of intrauterine adhesions (IUA). Results demonstrated that:
• Intrauterine perfusion of MSC-Exo significantly promoted:
Study Objective
Building on this preclinical evidence, we propose the first-in-human safety evaluation of clinical-grade iPS-Exo for moderate-to-severe IUA. This study aims to:
Establish preliminary safety profiles
Explore therapeutic efficacy signals
Address the unmet clinical need in severe IUA management Key Advantages
Full description
1、Study Objectives
2、Study Design: Single-center, prospective, open-label 3、Study Procedures IUA Treatment Protocol Patients diagnosed with moderate-to-severe intrauterine adhesions (IUA) will undergo standard hysteroscopic adhesiolysis.
Eligible patients who provide informed consent will receive:
Follow-up hysteroscopy at 1 month to assess adhesion recurrence:
If adhesions recur: Repeat adhesiolysis (Step 1) followed by another 3-perfusion cycle (24h post-op)
Monthly follow-up for 6 months to monitor:
Adverse events (per CTCAE v5.0)
Endometrial thickness (transvaginal ultrasound) Fertility Management IVF/ICSI:Embryo transfer performed per standard protocols after completing exosome therapy Endometrial preparation and transfer procedures follow institutional SOPs Natural conception:Ultrasound-guided ovulation monitoring + timed intercourse Detailed documentation of clinical pregnancy outcomes 4、 Patient Selection Criteria Inclusion Criteria 1) Demographics
Females aged 20-40 years with fertility desire 2) Diagnostic Confirmation
Hysteroscopically confirmed moderate-to-severe intrauterine adhesions (IUA) *(Per 2015 Chinese IUA Scoring System: Moderate=9-18 points; Severe=19-28 points)* 3) Surgical Eligibility
Indicated for hysteroscopic surgery without contraindications 4) Ovarian Function
Normal ovarian reserve (AMH ≥1.1 ng/mL or AFC ≥5) 5) Consent
Voluntary participation with signed informed consent Exclusion Criteria
Acute pelvic inflammatory disease or vaginitis 2. Uterine Abnormalities
History of uterine artery embolization
Submucosal fibroids (>2 cm)
Adenomyosis with uterine size >8-week gestation 3. Neoplastic Conditions
Malignancies
Endometrial hyperplasia (with/without atypia) 4. Contraindications
Hypersensitivity to hyaluronic acid gel 5. Hormonal Medications
Chronic steroid use
High-dose hormone therapy (>8 mg/day estrogen/progestin within 1 month) 6. Hematologic Disorders
Thrombocytopenia (platelets <50×10⁹/L)
Coagulopathy (aPTT >1.5×ULN) 7. Systemic Diseases
Uncontrolled diabetes (HbA1c >7%)
Severe cardiovascular disease (NYHA Class III/IV)
Life-threatening comorbidities 8. Clinical Trial Participation
Enrollment in other interventional trials within 3 months
Recent drug trials (<5 half-lives from last dose) 9. Investigator's Discretion
Any condition deemed unsuitable for participation
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Demographics
Exclusion criteria
Active Infections
o Acute pelvic inflammatory disease or vaginitis
Uterine Abnormalities
Neoplastic Conditions
Contraindications
o Hypersensitivity to hyaluronic acid gel
Hormonal Medications
Hematologic Disorders
Systemic Diseases
Clinical Trial Participation
Investigator's Discretion o Any condition deemed unsuitable for participation
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
29 participants in 4 patient groups, including a placebo group
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal